In early 1948, A. R. Ghani, a Muslim from
South Africa's
Transvaal, offered two prizes of five thousand
rupees each for the poet and composer of a new national anthem for the newly independent state of Pakistan. The prizes were announced through a government press advertisement published in June 1948. In December 1948, the
Government of Pakistan established the National Anthem Committee (NAC) with the task of coming up with the composition and lyrics for the official national anthem of Pakistan. The NAC was initially chaired by the Information Secretary,
Sheikh Muhammad Ikram, and its members included several politicians, poets and musicians, including
Abdur Rab Nishtar,
Ahmad G. Chagla and
Hafeez Jalandhari. The NAC encountered early difficulties in finding suitable music and lyrics. When President
Sukarno of
Indonesia became the first foreign head of state to visit Pakistan on 30 January 1950, there was no Pakistani national anthem to be played. In 1950, the impending state visit of the
Shah of Iran added urgency to the matter and resulted in the government of Pakistan asking the NAC to submit a state anthem without further delay. The NAC chairman, then Federal Minister for Education, Fazlur Rahman, asked several poets and composers to write lyrics but none of the submitted works were deemed suitable. The NAC also examined several different tunes and eventually selected the one presented by Ahmed G. Chagla and submitted it for formal approval. On 21 August 1950, the
Government of Pakistan adopted Chagla's tune for the national anthem. It was later played for
Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan during his official visit to the
United States on 3 May 1950. It was played before the NAC on 10 August 1950. Official recognition to the national anthem, however, was not given until August 1954. Official approval was announced by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting on 16 August 1954. The composer,
Ahmed Ghulam Ali Chagla, died in 1953, before the new national anthem was officially adopted. In 1955, there was a performance of the national anthem involving 11 major singers of Pakistan, including
Ahmad Rushdi, Kaukab Jahan, Rasheeda Begum, Najam Ara, Naseema Shaheen, Zawar Hussain, Akhtar Abbas, Ghulam Dastagir, Anwar Zaheer and Akhtar Wasi Ali. In 2021, then Interior Minister
Fawad Chaudhry announced that the official version of the national anthem would be re-recorded with better quality. The project was completed in 2022 during
Shehbaz Sharif’s tenure. 155 singers, 48 musicians and 6 bandmasters participated in the re-recording, and it was released on 14 August 2022, which was the 75th Independence Day of Pakistan. ==Music==